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2025 | 62 | 277-293

Article title

The borduna in Brazilian indigenous ethnology: symbol, power, and identity

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
This article offers an ethnographic analysis of the borduna, a traditional weapon employed by diverse Indigenous peoples of Brazil. Beyond its function in close combat, the borduna embodies symbolic dimensions of power, identity, and ancestral connection. Drawing on comparative data, the study examines its origins, crafting techniques, ceremonial roles, and morphological variations across distinct ethnic groups. By investigating the cultural significance and social roles of the borduna, the article contributes to a deeper understanding of Indigenous material culture, sociopolitical organization, and the enduring vitality of traditional knowledge systems.

Year

Volume

62

Pages

277-293

Physical description

Contributors

  • The Institute of Biopaleogeography named under Charles R. Darwin, Zlocieniec, District Drawski, West Pomerania, Poland

References

  • [1] S. Klimek, W. Milke. An analysis of the material culture of the Tupi peoples. American Anthropologist 37(1) (1935) 71-91
  • [2] H.E. Martel. Hans Staden's captive soul: Identity, imperialism, and rumors of cannibalism in sixteenth-century Brazil. Journal of World History (2006) 51-69
  • [3] D.W. Forsyth. The beginnings of Brazilian anthropology: Jesuits and Tupinamba cannibalism. Journal of Anthropological Research 39(2) (1983) 147-178
  • [4] S. Jasanoff. Future imperfect: science, technology, and the imaginations of modernity. Dreamscapes of Modernity: Sociotechnical Imaginaries and the Fabrication of Power (2015) 1-33
  • [5] G.L. Ribeiro. World Anthropologies: anthropological cosmopolitanisms and cosmopolitics. Annual Review of Anthropology 43 (2014) 483-498
  • [6] S. Harvey-Jordan, S. Long. The process and the pitfalls of semi-structured interviews. Community Practitioner 74(6) (2001) 219
  • [7] S.E. Rabionet. How I learned to design and conduct semi structured interviews: an ongoing and continuous journey. The Qualitative Report 16 (2011) 563-566
  • [8] V. Kozák. Ritual of a Bororo funeral. Natural History 72(1) (1963) 38-49
  • [9] D. Cleary. Lost altogether to the civilized world: race and the cabanagem in Northern Brazil, 1750 to 1850. Comparative Studies in Society and History 40(1) (1998) 109-135
  • [10] A.N. Bosmia, C.J. Griessenauer, V. Haddad Jr, R. Shane Tubbs. Ritualistic envenomation by bullet ants among the Sateré-Mawé Indians in the Brazilian Amazon. Wilderness & Environmental Medicine 26(2) (2015) 271-273

Document Type

article

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.psjd-4fa3fceb-0e17-4325-bd49-1477ce269105
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